End of Lecture 1 Diffraction Scattering – a system of two electrons: The two waves have equal amplitudes (because e 1 and e 2 are identical), but a phase.

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Presentation transcript:

End of Lecture 1

Diffraction Scattering – a system of two electrons: The two waves have equal amplitudes (because e 1 and e 2 are identical), but a phase difference of 2  r.S | S |=| s - s 0 |=2sin  / (e 1 ) Total scatter = (e 1 ) + (e 2 ) = 1 + exp (2  i r. S ) 2r.S2r.S (e 2 ) e1e1 e2e2 s0s0 s r

Diffraction Scattering by an atom: Atomic scattering factor f( S ) =   r  {exp (2  i r. S ) + exp (2  i -r. S )} d 3 r =   r  cos (2  r. S ) d 3 r The atomic scattering factor is independent of the direction of S, but does depend on the length of S: | S |=2sin  /

Fibre Diffraction from Insect Flight Muscle

The Beginning of Molecular Biology. Francis Crick and James D Watson

We wish to suggest a structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid (D.N.A.). This structure has novel features which are of considerable biological interest. A structure for nucleic acid has already been proposed by Pauling and Corey (1). They kindly made their manuscript available to us in advance of publication. Their model consists of three intertwined chains, with the phosphates near the fibre axis, and the bases on the outside. In our opinion, this structure is unsatisfactory for two reasons: (1) We believe that the material which gives the X-ray diagrams is the salt, not the free acid. Without the acidic hydrogen atoms it is not clear what forces would hold the structure together, especially as the negatively charged phosphates near the axis will repel each other. (2) Some of the van der Waals distances appear to be too small. Another three-chain structure has also been suggested by Fraser (in the press). In his model the phosphates are on the outside and the bases on the inside, linked together by hydrogen bonds. This structure as described is rather ill-defined, and for this reason we shall not comment on it. We wish to put forward a radically different structure for the salt of deoxyribose nucleic acid. This structure has two helical chains each coiled round the same axis (see diagram). We have made the usual chemical assumptions, namely, that each chain consists of phosphate diester groups joining ß-D-deoxyribofuranose residues with 3',5' linkages. The two chains (but not their bases) are related by a dyad perpendicular to the fibre axis. Both chains follow right- handed helices, but owing to the dyad the sequences of the atoms in the two chains run in opposite directions. Each chain loosely resembles Furberg's model No. 1; that is, the bases are on the inside of the helix and the phosphates on the outside. The configuration of the sugar and the atoms near it is close to Furberg's 'standard configuration', the sugar being roughly perpendicular to the attached base. There is a residue on each every 3.4 A. in the z-direction. We have assumed an angle of 36° between adjacent residues in the same chain, so that the structure repeats after 10 residues on each chain, that is, after 34 A. The distance of a phosphorus atom from the fibre axis is 10 A. As the phosphates are on the outside, cations have easy access to them.

The model of Pauling and Corey consists of three intertwined chains, with phosphates near the fibre axis, and the bases on the outside For Watson and Crick unsatisfactory because of: 1.Salt gives the X-ray diagram and not the free acid 2.It is not clear what forces hold the structure together, especially as the negativ charged phosphates near the axis will repel each other 3.Some of the van-der-Waals distance appear to small

The structure is an open one, and its water content is rather high. At lower water contents we would expect the bases to tilt so that the structure could become more compact. The novel feature of the structure is the manner in which the two chains are held together by the purine and pyrimidine bases. The planes of the bases are perpendicular to the fibre axis. The are joined together in pairs, a single base from the other chain, so that the two lie side by side with identical z-co-ordinates. One of the pair must be a purine and the other a pyrimidine for bonding to occur. The hydrogen bonds are made as follows : purine position 1 to pyrimidine position 1 ; purine position 6 to pyrimidine position 6. If it is assumed that the bases only occur in the structure in the most plausible tautomeric forms (that is, with the keto rather than the enol configurations) it is found that only specific pairs of bases can bond together. These pairs are : adenine (purine) with thymine (pyrimidine), and guanine (purine) with cytosine (pyrimidine). In other words, if an adenine forms one member of a pair, on either chain, then on these assumptions the other member must be thymine ; similarly for guanine and cytosine. The sequence of bases on a single chain does not appear to be restricted in any way. However, if only specific pairs of bases can be formed, it follows that if the sequence of bases on one chain is given, then the sequence on the other chain is automatically determined.

It has been found experimentally (3,4) that the ratio of the amounts of adenine to thymine, and the ration of guanine to cytosine, are always very close to unity for deoxyribose nucleic acid. It is probably impossible to build this structure with a ribose sugar in place of the deoxyribose, as the extra oxygen atom would make too close a van der Waals contact. The previously published X-ray data (5,6) on deoxyribose nucleic acid are insufficient for a rigorous test of our structure. So far as we can tell, it is roughly compatible with the experimental data, but it must be regarded as unproved until it has been checked against more exact results. Some of these are given in the following communications. We were not aware of the details of the results presented there when we devised our structure, which rests mainly though not entirely on published experimental data and stereochemical arguments. It has not escaped our notice that the specific pairing we have postulated immediately suggests a possible copying mechanism for the genetic material. Full details of the structure, including the conditions assumed in building it, together with a set of co-ordinates for the atoms, will be published elsewhere.

The model of Watson and Crick two helical chains each coiled round the same axis Right handed helices Residue on each chain every 3,4 Å in z direction Angle of 36° between the residues of the same chain Structure repeats after 10 residues, after 34 Å Bases are joined in pairs via hydrogen bond Pairs: adenine (purine) – thymine (pyrimidin), guanine (purine) – cytosine (pyrimidin)

The model of Watson and Crick D.N.A.: BASE – SUGAR PHOSPHATE BASE – SUGAR PHOSPHATE BASE – SUGAR PHOSPHATE BASE – SUGAR PHOSPHATE

The model of Watson and Crick

Crystallography

James Batcheller Sumner ( ) Nobel prize in Chemistry 1946 for his discovery that enzymes can be crystallized John Howard Northrop ( ), Wendell Meredith Stanley ( ) Nobel prize in Chemistry 1946 for their preparation of enzymes and virus proteins in a pure form

John Desmond Bernal ( ) Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin ( )

X-ray crystallography - first purify and crystallize

Crystallography - Crystals

Crystallography The main technique behind: X-ray source: X-ray detector SynchrotronSingle photon counter Storage ringphotographic film Rotating anode tubeimage plates Sealed x-ray tubearea detectors

Crystallography - Crystals Unit cell: a b c    a b c   

Crystallography - Crystals 0 a 2a 3a 4a ta b 2b2b c 2c2c vcvc ubub A crystal is a three dimensional stack of unit cells !

Crystallography - Crystals Different unit cells: a primitive unit cell a unit cell centered in the planes a body-centered unit cell a face-centered unit cell

Diffraction Scattering by a crystal: F 0 ( S ) =  f j ( S ) exp (2  i r j. S ) 0 a 2a 3a 4a ta b 2b2b c 2c2c vcvc ubub

Diffraction The Result:

Diffraction Fourier Transformation

-Stamp Collecting.

-Crystallography of Large Complexes. -Time-Resolved Crystallography. -Locating Hydrogen Atoms.

Substrate Protein Ligand BINDING REACTION FUNCTION STRUCTURAL CHANGE

Time Resolved Crystallography.

Mouse Prion Protein (PrP c ) NMR Structure

Protein Structure

The Peptide Backbone Chain Crosslinking - the disulphide bridge

Side-Chain Conformation

Linus Carl Pauling ( ) Nobel prize in Chemistry 1954 for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances

The Alpha Helix (Pauling & Corey, from alpha keratin)

Supersecondary Structure

Single helix: Alamethicin - a voltage-gated ion channel antibiotic Tertiary Structure

Helix-turn Helix: Rop (RNA-Binding Protein) Four-Helix Bundle

Two Greek Keys (gamma crystallin)

DNA-Binding Alpha Domains.

Cro repressor

BETA - BARREL: PORIN

Alpha/Beta HORSHESHOE Placental ribonuclease inhibitor: binds very strongly to any ribonuclease that leaks into the cytosol.

Same subunit found more than once:

Quaternary Structure: Aggregation of tertiary domains to form a quaternary structure. Photosynthetic reaction centre

Potassium Channel

Aquaporins

Strands from different protein chains associate to form 2 o struct.

Same subunit associates